8.15.2021

Masters and Johnson Playboy Interview 1979



Masters and Johnson Playboy Interview Nov. 1979
Sticking with the theme of Masters and Johnson interviews that give us some further insight into their research, I am now moving on to their Playboy interview from 1979. That's 13 years after they published their foundational book on the physiology of male and female arousal and orgasm, Human Sexual Response; 11 years after their first interview in Playboy; 9 years after releasing Human Sexual Inadequacy, which was an exciting and well received book about their sex therapy work at the time but has since had a lot of significant holes poked in its 'recovery rates' and extensive biases (intercourse obsessed much? - HERE'S a summary of a book that goes through all the criticisms of that M&J research and therapy)...but 1 year before they started really getting hit hard with those criticisms; and mere months after the release of their most controversial book, Homosexuality in Perspective. That book is controversial because they claimed to affect change in all but 35% of their homosexual patients who expressed a desire to function as heterosexuals. So basically it was conversion therapy, but it is worth noting that M&J only applied conversion therapy to those who asked for it. They also worked with homosexual patients that wanted sexual therapy but within their homosexual relationships. Their conversion therapy success numbers may be a bit like their previous hetero-sex therapy success numbers proved to be - secretive and not at all what they were made out to be. 



Anyway, this interview revolves a lot around that book - what it says and the reception of it. The conversion therapy is just a part of it. M&J also discuss how the homosexuals in their studies have sex and compare that with how the heterosexuals in their study have sex. They describe homosexual sex very often as a thoughtful, educated, communicative process that, well, is pretty great - and in no small part (although they don't say this directly) because necessarily those non-hetero couples are not hyperfocused on penile vaginal intercourse...which is, as much as we'd like to think otherwise, a lesson about sexual interaction we still haven't learned yet as a society. I think Masters and Johnsons actually have some #real-talk insights that are worth hearing.

This interview is also is interesting to me because Masters and Johnson (M&J) seem a bit wilder in this. They both to some extent seem less worried about giving opinions unbacked by their research or speaking about things they haven't published on -even though, as always, they continue to specifically say they are worried about those things and emphasize how very fastidious they are- and the Playboy interviewer takes pains to reiterate those qualities about them both (but Masters specifically). There are some comments M&J make about things like people faking orgasms in their studies and different ways females can orgasm that sometimes contradict things they have already said and also give me some real insight into aspects of their methodology that has up till then been a bit more unclear. (Did they not always verify the female orgasm in their studies with observation of involuntary pelvic muscle contractions? Did Johnson really just talk about back of the neck orgasms??/)  Anyway, they just really do seem more out there in this interview, or maybe more tired or arrogant or something, but either way, I do take pains to note their contradictions.  

I will only highlight/summarize parts of this article that are relevant to the lady-gasm type of subjects on which I focus, but I'll include anything that's just straight up interesting as well. It'll still be a long-ass read, though (you know me). 

If not straight up quoting, I'll always be summarizing their words with the best of my ability unless you see a section specifically letting you know it's my thoughts or you see the [ME:] brackets where I will  give my opinions. Enjoy.

insight into the participant study process
  • Masters says they haven't actually observed any subjects since 1970.
  • They described their process of getting people comfortable doing sexual things in the lab. First they would leave them in a room alone to do it. Participants would just leave when they were done. Second, M&J would sit in an adjacent room working with the door open assuring participants they wouldn't enter or observe. Third, they would do the same, but tell participants they would enter in from time to time but to just continue what they are doing. Then if the participants were comfortable, the next time M&J would do their full observations. 
  • There were always at least 2 of them in the room for these. Johnson describes it further: "As the couple became more comfortable, we would introduce the physiologists who monitored the EKG or the polygraph or who ran the cameras for the department of illustration. You must understand that we weren’t there to watch sexual activity as a psychologist, or even a casual observer, might. We were trying to define what occurred in certain parts of the body. If we were measuring, say, lubrication at certain intervals, we might not even stay in the room the whole time. On other occasions, we would sit and stare for an hour at a four-inch-square patch of skin, trying to determine significant color changes."

gay and straight sexual activity - a sort of comparison (but it's not about comparing, of course)
  • Masters says that one of the most striking findings from Homosexuality in Perspective is that homosexuals and heterosexuals demonstrate so little difference in ability to respond to non-coital  sexual stimulation. [Me: coital is a fancy way of saying penile vaginal intercourse].
  • The interviewer notes that the the Time Magazine cover story they pulled from the book was that gays are better in bed. Masters clarifies that it's not about comparing. He says "We have little concern with technique. We are most concerned with attitude, with the ability to communicate. In presenting our findings on homosexuality, we want to show the wealth of variation that is possible, so that it doesn’t become threatening." 
  • Johnson chimes in about the interviewer's further pressing that it seems gay people know better about their partner's needs. She says, "Well, they work at it a little more. They invest more of themselves in sex; therefore, they probably get a little more back. They don’t have more orgasms, mind you. They just seem more involved. But I want to stress that this is not strictly homosexual. The same thing could be learned from heterosexual couples who communicate well." [Me: later studies would in fact indicate that lesbians have more orgasms during partner sex than hetero women (although these were surveys not observation and physical verification of orgasm so take it as you will). However, M&J's studies were specifically filled with people who did have a history of orgasms with their partner, so that probably skewed it.]
  • About "heavy petting" [ME: this feels like a very 1950's phrase to me, and I am not completely sure what all it encompasses - manual genital stimulation for sure, but I also think any other body-hand stuff during sex?] Gay couples, M&J said, tended to take their time and it was a more free-flowing process whereas straight couples created the impression that they were just in it to "get the job done."
  • After discussing that lesbian women tended to kiss or caress before jumping to the genitals (only 1 out of 76 went directly to her partner's genitals at the onset). Masters tells the interviewer that it was truly fascinating to see that when couples do not have good communications, they tended to approach each other like they were masturbating themselves, and that often was not the way the partner preferred.
  • Johnson brings some perspective: "Men, having heard that the clitoris is the first line of stimulation, would often move directly to clitoral fingering. It is rare in our experience, in the lab or in the subjective histories that women have given, that they can tolerate direct, intense stimulation of the clitoral glans. One reason is its acute sensitivity. Manipulation can very rapidly become irritating. The best way I’ve ever heard it described was “too much sensation too soon.” It is the rare woman, in stimulating herself, or given the opportunity to direct the stimulation as she wishes, who will want the clitoral glans directly stimulated. Those we have found in the laboratory who do stimulate the clitoral glans use a lubricant that tends to diminish sensitivity."
  • The the interviewer is all like, 'how could a man know that if he's not told?' and Johnson keeps on, "Let’s return to what Bill said. They do unto others as they have done unto themselves, and that’s not always what a woman can respond to. Quite often the male uses his fingers as he would a penis. If the lesbians used penetration with their fingers, they seldom went beyond the outer third of the vagina, which, in terms of nerve endings, is the most sensitive area. Husbands frequently used their fingers as a substitute penis, even though their wives merely tolerated this approach, especially when approached this way before they were really aroused. One third of the wives we questioned said that they felt deep manual penetration was more exciting to their husbands than to them. Lesbian women, on the other hand, exhibited a general willingness to find out what their partners like and appreciate."
  • Masters notes that the communication was not always verbal. It was often touch or body language [ME: like, ya know, they paid some fucking attention to their partner]. Playboy keeps asking about breast play, and M&J say that lesbians tended to do it a lot longer, give equal time to each breast, and play with more of the breast. They said lesbian women seemed to be focusing on the pleasure of the breasts, whereas Masters noted, "In contrast, men involved in stimulating a woman’s breasts seemed wrapped up in what they were doing and were relatively unaware of their partner’s pleasure, or lack of it." 
  • They also note that most of the gay male couples engaged in breast play, but few hetero couples engaged in breast play on the males. When asked why most women don't do this for men, Johnson says, "For the same reasons a man is reluctant to find out about women from women. I think it’s the cultural message that begins during adolescence: The woman is the object of sex, man is the subject and the predicate. No one, including the man himself, calls attention to man’s breasts or any other part of his anatomy as an erogenous zone. The very idea may embarrass both of them."
  • Masters, after talking a bit about how gay men approach sex (not too different from lesbians), mentions that there was often a teasing to bring arousal levels almost to orgasm and then back down again, this included varied growth and softening of the penile erection. Masters said that hetero men tend to view the penis as a "single-shot, single-caliber entity," assuming that it should get hard and stay hard until the orgasm.
  • When asked about differences in gay and straight approaches to oral sex, Masters said this: "The only real differences stemmed from the way lesbians and heterosexual men performed cunnilingus. The women were more inventive. They started with the breasts, moved to the lower abdomen and thighs and then skirted the vagina before focusing on the clitoris. The more variation they came up with, the higher the level of excitement for the recipient. But again, the most interesting thing was the degree of the stimulator’s own involvement — some of the women performing cunnilingus on their lesbian partners also experienced orgasm during the act. The heterosexual men rarely had devoted significant time to learning or improving their cunnilingual technique. They saw cunnilingus as a means to an end. Men proved themselves sexually in intercourse. In contrast, their wives often expressed the feeling that fellatio was a challenge, a technique that they should become expert in if they were to conduct themselves as sexually effective women." [ME: I mean, shit hasn't changed much, am I right?]

men and women - generalized differences in observed behavior
  • Masturbation? M&J said the differences in masturbation were not between gay and straight but more between genders. Masters says of female masturbation: "Approximately four out of five of the women masturbated while lying on their backs. They were generally less direct in their approach to the clitoris than were men in approaching the penis. Some women touched their breasts, others stroked the lower abdomen or the thighs. Most women tended to touch the glans directly only at the onset of the clitoral stimulation, if at all. But as sexual tensions elevated, they moved from the glans to the stimulation of the clitoral shaft. When they got tired or lost the thread of their response, they slowed the pace. Far more often than men, women deliberately varied the rate and pressure of genital stroking, at times even stopping and starting clitoral manipulation — as though teasing themselves." Johnson added, "Or re-establishing contact with their level of excitement."
  • Master says: "Men moved immediately to the penis. Approximately three out of five masturbated while lying on their backs; the rest did so standing, sitting or lying face down. The force and rapidity of the stroking increased as excitement increased. For the most part, men concentrated on the shaft. At orgasm, most men slowed, or even stopped stroking. In contrast, the women usually kept stroking or massaging through orgasm."
  • And when asked about accounting for the difference, Johnson says: "They not only were accommodating their anatomy, they also were doing what made it individually work for them We are dealing with two different groups — in this case, men and women. Each has grown up with a different level of permission, not only to masturbate but to express themselves sexually. Through subliminal messages or deliberate teachings, most men in our culture are given permission to be sexual, to explore and experiment with their sexuality. This makes possible less guilt-ridden masturbation, or at least a more practical, more pragmatic approach to sexual activity and to masturbation per se."
    • [ME: Johnson often talks about the cultural baggage women have of feeling guilt or worry about their need for sex and about how that can negatively affects their ability to orgasm (as compared to men) at any particular time- indicating that the mind can block arousal even though the body is getting otherwise appropriate sexual stimulation. She goes on to touch on that a bit more in the next questions. I agree, but the thing M&J always seem to ignore is that it's not just the difference in sexual permission and guilt that creates a bit of an "extra hurdle" for women seeking arousal and orgasm. It is also the lack of quality, arousing, orgasmic, sexual experiences offered women over time; for instance having intercourse but with no orgasm (i.e. a sexual encounter does not equal orgasm or pleasure in the same way it does for most men) or seeing mostly female bodies as sexualized instead of male bodies (so hetero women not having the same history of arousal related to the male body as hetero men have with female bodies). Anyway, I think a big criticism of M&J's therapy work is that their understanding of society's sexual gender inequality seems to be mostly limited to 'men are allowed sexual permission and women are not so much.' They, in my opinion, almost never acknowledge the role that gender inequality plays in creating a vast set of sexual situations experienced by women that are either unarousing, unorgasmic, frustrating, physically painful, abusive, or unwanted - in a way they would rarely be for men. These sets of experiences give women a more complicated relationship to arousal, orgasm, and sexual situations. I imagine M&J don't speak much about it because a cultural obsession with intercourse as the end all be all of sex is a huge part of this gender inequality problem and they are super complicit in that...and may not be able to see past it.]
  • Playboy asks about some non committed partners they threw together in the lab (all the homosexual couples in the study were committed partners to match the committed partners in the heterosexual studies), and female orgasm was mentioned. Masters noted that there was double the orgasm failure rate for these newbie couples, and was talking about why. He says, "Intercourse was just mutual-masturbation exercise for the assigned couples. The males were experienced and had good ejaculatory control, so the females usually had time to respond orgasmically —but not always. With each partner concentrating on his or her own needs, there was not much communication or cooperation between strangers. They were not all that involved." 
    • [ME: I want to point out here that M&J are uber-focused on women having orgasms during intercourse, but they never claim that a woman could have orgasms from the penis stimulating the inside of the vagina - in fact, quite the opposite. They are clear in Human Sexual Response that either direct or indirect stimulation to the external clitoral glans area is the reason for female orgasms during intercourse. They go so far as to claim that its possible for the penis, during thrusting, to pull on the labia, which pulls on the clitoral hood, which rubs against the clitoral glans with each thrust - their kinda infamous Rube-Goldberg Explanation. My point is that they always say "during" intercourse, which I believe is a slick way of acknowledging that female orgasm does not arise from intercourse (the penis stimulating the vagina), but also not clearly stating that intercourse itself is shit way to get a woman off. They need to be slick about that, I assume, because giving the impression their studies show intercourse to be lacking as a means for lady-gasms (which is actually the accurate impression one should get from their studies)  is not what people want to hear and probably not what their donors want to hear. Intercourse as a foundation of heterosexual activity is something that society as well as M&J, quite perplexingly, strongly and sometimes irrationally hold to. So, with that said, it also seems like M&J are not blind to the outcomes of their own studies, and that's why, I believe, they are careful to always talk about female orgasm during intercourse not from it. Thus, I do think that "during" opens the door to a lot of possibilities. Lady-gasms could arise from a number of things as long as there's a dick in the vagina while it's happening - vibrator on the clit area during, manual simulation from either partner during, grinding the clit area against the man's pelvis during. The mention of the men's ejaculatory control in the quote above, I don't believe indicates that their dicks made the women come because they could pump it into their vaginas for a long time. From my understanding of M&J's methods, I believe it more likely means that these men could continue the intercourse long enough so that their female partner could create an orgasm for herself while he was still inside her - thus assuring it was a "during" intercourse orgasm even though the woman maybe could have done it much more easily if his dick wasn't inside her.]

'Great American Formula for Sex' - "A kiss on the lips, a hand on the breasts and a dive for the pelvis." - Masters
Masters: "Some 80 percent of the men made love in the missionary position. They mounted the female as soon as they had an erection and as soon as they thought the partner was ready. Usually, they decided that she was ready when she was obviously lubricated.

Playboy: "Is that incorrect?" 
[ME: Yes, mothafucker, it is incorrect. As soon as a lady shows physical arousal, ya do intercourse on her? The most shittiest sex act for ladygasms there is? The man gets a nice warm encompassing hole to fully stimulate his organ of orgasm, but her organ of orgasm (the clit) just hangs out in the wind while a dude pumps an orgasm out in her vagina? Yeah, that is incorrect because it sucks, ya ass.

Johnson: "Well, in theory, you might say it is true. Vaginal lubrication for the woman is essentially a counterpart of erection in the male. Ah, but it doesn’t stop there. I’m really going to tread in water I
normally try to avoid, because we generally represent only on a same-sex basis — but I’m going to suggest the very real possibility that a man with an erection is not always a man who is ready for intercourse. Is that reasonable?"

Playboy: "Certainly."

Johnson: "OK, so that’s the point being made here. The woman may demonstrate physiological or
anatomical readiness. But it’s a mistake to assume that because she is physically prepared, she has also arrived at the point of emotional or even spiritual receptivity." 
[ME: or that she even wants to get banged instead of doing something focused on her clit. I mean, she might wants to, like the man she's with, have a sweet orgasm without having the extra hurdle of working around a penis pumping into her - but I digress
"So often the man makes this assumption, penetrates and immediately sets the pattern of thrusting. She is even further distracted by the task of accommodating to the depth, frequency and the force of the man’s thrusting action before she ever establishes awareness of her own responsiveness. Although she ultimately may be orgasmic, her level of subjective involvement may remain low and her sense of satisfaction minimal. There is a high risk of hostility toward the partner developing in such a situation." 
[ME: Johnson is being very measured here, but in my mind, I'm hearing her say, 'when women are having sex all the time where they just get mounted as soon as they get wet, then she probably won't orgasm most if not any of the time, and sex is gonna start feeling really sucky, and she's gonna wanna tell you to go straight to hell next time you bring it up, but she might do it out of guilt and she will eventually resent the fuck out of you.' Johnson, methinks, is describing many a marriage out there -even to this day 40 some years later.]

Masters: "The man sets the thrusting pattern in almost every act of intercourse we observed where the
woman was supine." [ME: aka  - on her back]

Johnson: "There’s a drumbeat out there that continues to beat a single message: The male is the sex expert. As a woman, you must always follow his lead or you will destroy him. Add, 'Intercourse is the be-all and end-all of sexual expression' and you have the number-one basis for sexual boredom and disappointment in a relationship." 
[ME: Again, this is the weird part about M&J, and particularly J - I feel like they so clearly know that intercourse is not the ideal way to set a woman up for orgasm during sexual activity. Yet, they spend so much of their research, and therapy work in particular, talking about how to make sure women can orgasm during it. In one way, I think maybe they are just old fashioned and biased and can't get away from the overarching feeling that intercourse is important and women were meant to orgasm during it. On the other hand, I wonder if they know that sex for women is better when intercourse is merely a side dish at best (see below), but feel that because the society is so deeply stuck on it, and so often people want help in getting women orgasms during it, that focusing on how women can orgasm while there is a penis inside her is more valuable than trying to flip all of sexual culture on its head. I also do feel that they are careful about not seeming too radical given that their research work is edgy and largely funded by grants.]

Playboy: "One of the sacred tenets of marriage manuals is that if you engage in enough foreplay, everything will be all right in the end. Did you find that to be so?"

Masters: "I don’t even like the term foreplay. It sounds like something less than important or meaningful. Dividing sexual response into stages is a necessity for the scientific observer, but sex partners who do the same thing make the human experience a goal-oriented performance. In so doing, a woman’s capacity for spontaneous responsivity especially is victimized."

Playboy: "How?"

Masters: "We found that when we requested a woman and a man in the lab to engage in, let’s say, genital touching or cunnilingus, the woman tended to lubricate freely, in direct proportion to the amount of stimulation she was receiving. However, when on another occasion we asked the same couple to engage in intercourse and, as part of the total process, the man engaged in the same activities — genital touching or cunnilingus — the woman frequently did not lubricate as freely, in direct proportion to the amount of stimulation she was receiving." 
[ME: Again, this shit is what I'm talking about. 1. Despite their otherwise intercourse-obsessiveness, I do think M&J see the problems with intercourse and female orgasm. 2. for real though - that observation is super interesting and to me feels completely sensible and predictable because that type of reaction relates back to a woman's previous experiences. When she knows intercourse is happening, she also (likely) knows from experience that the pleasure and/or orgasm will be spotty at best, and her body reacts accordingly to that mediocre future laying ahead of her. If she knows intercourse is off the table, her past experiences of non intercourse sex are quite possibly way more filled with pleasure and/or orgasm and her body, again, responds accordingly to the much more exciting future laying in front of her]

Johnson: "Because she or they interpreted the request as specifically oriented to the goal of
orgasmic attainment and the other pleasurable activities became merely 'foreplay.'” 

Playboy: "You seem to be saying that if you want to see a woman live up to her natural potential, don’t have intercourse. Do everything but."

Johnson: "No, just don’t have intercourse to the exclusion of undemanding, enjoyable intimacy." 
[Me: I'd like to think that what Johnson really wanted to say there was, 'Yes.']

From there they all vaguely discuss how to structure a sex life with a woman where intercourse isn't the main topic; an evening where it's off the table, many evenings of exploration, or just always explore and improvise without a determined goal. Then Playboy asks...

Playboy: "Is it possible that the homosexual couples you observed — because they were not under any
pressure to have intercourse — were better able to enjoy themselves?"

Masters: "Certainly. They give more of themselves to these activities — masturbation, fellatio, cunnilingus— because it is the only thing they have. Even when we told heterosexual women that cunnilingus was the point of the evening, they were so unused to it as a pleasurable end in itself that they initially did not get particularly involved."

Playboy: "Do you have any explanation as to why heterosexuals seemed so unimaginative? For example, 'the kiss on the lips, hand on the breast, dive for the pelvis' may be boring — but we have
it on good authority that 'a kiss on the lips, a hand on the breast, a dive for the pelvis, plus a piece of ice' can be astonishing." 
[ME: Listen this dude that's interviewing is a real piece of work. What is he even sayin here? A piece of ice? Is he a Cosmo sex advice column come to life?]

Masters: "I think heterosexual couples have too many social protocols that they feel they should follow. I’m sure there are many homosexual protocols as well, but they certainly aren’t depicted by the general media as heterosexual guidelines are. So, as I see it, if you don’t have a scenario, you tend to improvise more." 
[ME: And...I think 'social protocols' mostly means thinking sex isn't sex unless there is intercourse, and everything else is a lead up to it. That shit is deep in us and needs to GO.]

Then the interviewer is all like, but aren't gays following a script because one is the man and the other is the woman? And M&J, are like, "No. Not at all."

controversy about conversion therapy in Homosexuality in Perspective
  • At this point M&J are asked about the controversy from this book in the gay community (conversion therapy and the belief that homosexuality is largely environmental). M&J defend themselves by saying they never treated it as a disease and only helped people who wanted it. [Me: As of now, I've never actually read Homosexuality in Perspective, so I don't have much to go on. If you're interested, though, there's probably great criticisms of the therapy in this book out there.]
  • Masters reveals that they had originally thought they would release a report about the physiology of homosexual arousal and orgasm along with a report on heterosexual physiology of arousal and orgasm, but they discovered that there simply was not a physiological difference between hetero and homosexual bodily response, and so it could all be contained in Human Sexual Response without breaking it into 2 reports.
  • The questions turn to the selection of participants, and Masters notes that "All of the subjects had to be able to respond to self-stimulation, mutual stimulation and either fellatio or cunnilingus. In addition, the heterosexual subjects had to be able to respond effectively during intercourse."
  • When asked if ability to respond was measured by capacity for orgasm, Masters say, "Yes, although we certainly acknowledge that sexual proficiency is not synonymous with orgasmic responsiveness. Sexual gratification, sexual maturity and sexual interest are phenomena that must be considered somewhat apart from orgasmic attainment — or orgasmic failure — alone. But our ability to document orgasm as a precise, definable physiological event made it a useful form of measurement."

more on intercourse
Playboy: "How did your subjects perform during intercourse?"

Masters: "Couples failed to achieve orgasm only three percent of the time. And that small failure rate was still four times greater than the failure rate for masturbation, fellatio/cunnilingus or partner manipulation." 

Playboy: "But isn’t that an astonishingly successful rate? It has been suggested that your study is biased in favor of sexual superstars, as if you were writing a book on running after interviewing the top five finishers in the Boston Marathon."

Masters: "I think that’s very fair criticism, but if you want to know what happens, you generally will have to work with those it happens to. We have been studying people who were selected for functional ability in a laboratory setting. We haven’t the vaguest idea of what happens at night, in the dark, under the covers, in the privacy of people’s homes."

Johnson: "There is another reason for studying functional people. To ask an individual who has any
history of sexual problems to perform in a lab would be unthinkable. The pressure and potential for
trauma could be enormous."

Playboy: "Even the superstars, however, did not do as well during intercourse as they did when
experiencing the other forms of stimulation — masturbation, manipulation or oral sex. Does that suggest that intercourse is vastly overrated as a form of pleasure?"

Masters: "If you think about it, the three types of stimulation you just mentioned occur in a my-turn/your-turn situation, whether practiced by homosexuals or by heterosexuals. In masturbation, one is setting one’s own pace, and one is obviously acutely aware of one’s own needs and levels of response. Preferred techniques of stimulation are used as desired. When one is being manipulated by a partner, it’s still a my-turn/your-turn situation, which, with good communication, can work very well. The same thing is true for fellatio/cunnilingus. One partner can focus his or her entire attention on the other and get some sense of what works — through good communication, same-sex empathy or because of familiarity with your response pattern. But in intercourse, we have two people trying to function simultaneously. Inevitably, that is more difficult. There is more opportunity for failure when two people are involved in routine sexual interaction than when responding on a my-turn/your-turn basis. The catch is that the culture says that intercourse is the be-all and end-all of sexual expression." 
[ME: What he's also forgetting to mention is that the act of intercourse, in and of itself, is enough to give the kind of stimulation that could easily get a penis off. The penis is encompassed by definition during intercourse and that is the type of stimulation males give themselves while masturbating. It is not, however, in and of itself an act that gives females the type of stimulation they need to orgasm - the type of simulation they need during masturbation. The penis gets stimulation. The vaginal canal gets stimulation, but the vaginal canal is not the organ of orgasm for females. The clitoral glans area is, and that is not a necessary part of intercourse. It might happen, and probably only if it is intentionally added...and only in a way that also continues to allow they penis to stay in the vagina, so it's limited and that's important to remember, and frankly it's crazy that M&J do not say that outright all the time...because it's undoubtedly true and clearly M&J  have some understanding of that idea.]

Playboy: "Aren’t those forms of stimulation subject to the charge of “servicing” one’s partner rather than finding sex mutually pleasurable?" 
[ME: mothafucker please, if allowing your innards to be rammed into with little to no opportunity for your own pleasure organ to be stimulated isn't a 'service' - I don't know what is. The (unfortunately deeply common but incredibly incorrect) idea that intercourse is the utmost of mutually pleasurable sex acts - that it is anywhere near as orgasmic for the female as it is for the male - is at the root of so many cultural and individual sexual problems.]

Masters: "Well, the answer to that is yes. But intercourse can be mere service, too. It is still true in this
country, let alone in the rest of the world. Intercourse is a service. There are infinitely more times that the female is used for service than the female and male are together as full partners in intercourse. That is true wherever you have a double-standard society. And that’s most of the world."

anal sex
Playboy: "Perhaps the one notion that most heterosexuals have about gays centers on anal sex. It is generally assumed that it is the gay equivalent to intercourse. Did you observe that behavior in the lab?"

Masters: "For the homosexual men we were working with, it wasn’t the primary means of sexual release, although anal sex was frequently experienced."

Playboy: "But you studied it, didn’t you?"

Masters: 'With a few subjects: five homosexual and seven heterosexual couples."

Playboy: "What did you find?"

Masters: "We asked each of the homosexual and heterosexual couples to engage in anal intercourse on two occasions. We noticed an interesting physiological response. Upon initial penetration, there was
discomfort, for some partners approximately half the time, but then the sphincter would relax. After full
penetration was obtained, there was no further evidence of discomfort. Once thrusting began, the sphincter would reverse its relaxation pattern and constrict tightly around the shaft of the penis."

Playboy: "Did the partners find anal intercourse pleasurable?"

Masters: "The female recipients reached orgasmic levels of sexual excitation on 11 of 14 occasions; there were three instances of multiorgasmic experience. The male recipients did not respond in a similar fashion. In ten episodes, there were only two instances of male orgasm, and in both of those instances, the men were masturbating while they were mounted rectally." 
[ME: Maybe this is my bias, but I'm skeptical as hell, or at least I would like to know more. Since he said the men were masturbating, he's insinuating the women definitely were not. How were they recording/observing the orgasms? This finding of anal sex lady-gasms wasn't in Human Sexual Response, their foundational work on the physiology of arousal and orgasm, and the mechanism of a penis stimulating the inside of the anus is not a mechanism that seems likely to engage the external clitoral glans on its own - which is something M&J say needs to happen for female orgasm. It also seems to indicate that there is a specific difference in male and female sexual response - since none of the men and almost all of the women did orgasm from anal stimulation alone - and a major foundation of M&J's research in Human Sexual Response was that males and females were more the same than different when it came to sexual response. This seems like a HUGE revelation about female orgasm, and they seem so casual about it. That makes me wonder. Is it possible M&J were just taking the women's word for it? Or did they actually record and measure the involuntary rhythmic contractions of orgasm in these women during anal sex? I'd like to think they did, but I also think if they did discover something so new and interesting, they would be careful to talk about how they made this revelation. Like I said, I'd like to know more. I'm skeptical.]

Playboy: "That finding runs against the common myth — it reverses the stereotype that anal sex is the sole right of gays. Women enjoy it, too?"

Johnson: "Some women enjoy it." 
[ME: I feel like I can imagine her saying this, and she's kinda skeptical as well and emphasizing the word 'some']

lady-gasms (mostly Johnson's bonkers discussion of lady-gasms)
Playboy: "Let’s take this opportunity to review the basics. You stated that during intercourse, the clitoris receives indirect stimulation. There are many women who say that may be true for others but not for them. What do you say?"

Johnson: "The clitoris does not require direct stimulation or contact. The total body is a potentially erotic 'organ.' It is very possible to choose a completely asexual part of the anatomy and develop it as the source of sexual stimulation to orgasm. There can be back-of-the-neck orgasms, bottom-of-the-foot
orgasms and palm-of-the-hand orgasms."

Playboy: "Our readers may be acquainted with that last kind." 
[ME: hilarious masturbation joke, dude.]

Johnson: "I grew up in the country, where little kids learn that it’s very sexy to play with the palm of a
hand. It has to do with nerve endings, in terms of the sensuous susceptibility of certain parts of the
anatomy over others. Similarly, the clitoris is a unique organ, insofar as we know it has no other purpose than receiving or transmitting sexual pleasure. It is certainly very responsive to stimulation, and it is possible for a woman to develop that response to a level of dependency, because she knows it works and she doesn’t know that anything else works. Those women who have not responded in intercourse after having developed real orgasmic effectiveness by stimulation of the clitoris, either by self or by partner —but who expected direct transposition of this successful response pattern to intercourse — can be very disappointed or disillusioned about their presumed 'inadequacy.'” 
[ME: Sorry? Is doing sexy things to your palm some kind of country child thing that I've never heard of or is she spouting of some bonkers assertions?]

Playboy: "Let’s get this straight. First, there was the debate about clitoral versus vaginal orgasms. Your notion is that all orgasms are clitoral orgasms, or rather, all orgasms are total-body orgasms. All this can get a little confusing." 
[ME: Okay - I'm actually with this dude on this one. I feel like M&J had a clear message that all orgasms were clitoral when they were talking about their actual observations and research in the early years. They were quite clear and specific about it (and M&J were not talking about the 'inner clitoral legs' as causing orgasms through vaginal penetration which is unsubstantiated but so popular to talk about now. M&J understood the immense size of the inner clitoris, but are speaking of the externally accessible clit. I got a whole post on the current misunderstandings about the 'inner clit if you want to read more). Now here Johnson is spouting confusing things without also backing those statements up (like whatever she just said about total body, back of the neck and palm of the hand orgasms). I have never seen their research indicating they observed 'back of the neck' orgasms.  Why would they just throw that out there. It seems truly bonkers]

Johnson: "Freud postulated that if a woman could not be stimulated to orgasm by intercourse, she was sexually immature. He carried it rather far. This is not to indict Freudian concepts in general. His
incredible genius was getting answers one women at a time when it was highly inappropriate for women to express themselves sexually. Freud also was a man whose interpretations must have had a lot to do with his personal life. To make matters more difficult, his perceptions and his theories have often been taken out of context by those who treasure a single concept and defend it as the only way —the Word." 
[ME: so she didn't respond to his confusion at all and just talked about Freud.]

Playboy: "We just read an abstract from the Third International Congress of Medical Sexology in which a sexologist claims there are clitoral, vaginal and uterine orgasms."

Johnson: "Oh, Saint Christopher! The amount of garbage in this field, and the number of people without credibility! Of course, the uterus responds with orgasm — if the woman responding has a uterus. Every other part of her system responds in some fashion as well. The variables are in degree of involvement and intensity and in subjective perception. There aren’t a dozen people in this field who know what they are talking about in terms of the nature of human sexual response. No. Make that 24." 
[ME: Okay, but she still didn't address his confusion. She spouted off about all these different types of orgasms - palm, neck, etc.. Then the interviewer was like, I'm confused, I thought you all said there were just clitoral. Then she was like, Freud didn't get it right. Then he was like, some people say there are vaginal, clitoral and uterine orgasms, and she goes off like that's a crazy statement...but her back of the neck orgasms weren't??]

Masters: "You’re stretching it." 
[ME: I love it. I bet they talk such shit about other sex researchers and writers. I wish I could have been a fly on the wall in their office.]

Johnson: "There are many people out there in the world who have made their own sexual self-discoveries who have infinitely better sexual insights than so many people who presumably are researching the subject."

Playboy: "We’ve heard of doctors who claim that they can cure an inorgasmic woman by surgically
realigning the clitoris. Is there any basis to that claim?"

Johnson: "Don’t ask me!"

Playboy: "We’re asking you."

Johnson: "I have such a violent response to that that I don’t even want to publicize it. For God’s sake, this is where I become a radical feminist in every sense of the word. By the way, I’m aware of the strategy of ignoring something inconsequential until it dies a natural death, but I find it difficult to invoke with this issue. That a man determines what is wrong with female anatomical design and a few silly women say “It’s so wonderful” sets us back 50 years. My husband will not criticize other doctors, but as a woman, I cannot sit still and give you a benign smile when you ask me that question. If someone, as an individual, wants surgical modification of anatomy that is neither malformed nor diseased, fine. But for someone to promote a male-oriented, male-originated concept of what women can or cannot do without this surgical intervention — it’s taking gross advantage of the layperson’s vulnerability." 
[ME: Get at it, Virginia! I mean, she's right. Clits work. They cause orgasm when the right stimulation is applied. They just don't work at causing orgasms very often during intercourse, which is where the surgical realignment of the clit comes from - moving it closer to the vaginal hole so she can orgasm during intercourse (it doesn't work btw). It's like surgically messing with your tongue because you can't taste things when you rub them on your chin. It's not malfunctioning, you're just not using it right.]

Playboy: "In Human Sexual Response, you suggest that women are potentially multi orgasmic. Yet
according to The Hite Report, as many as 70 percent of the women in America are unable to reach
orgasm during intercourse. How do you respond to such findings?"

Johnson: "Such reports are very mixed blessings. There are a lot of simple truths that can be distorted by poor interpretation of such reports. They do not reveal the capacity or potential for woman’s sexual
response. They only reveal the prevailing condition of generations of women taught to deny their sexual
feelings and needs or to pretend they didn’t exist. That is the disservice of such reports. On a more
positive side, they do let a woman know she is not alone in her inability to reach orgasm with intercourse. Unfortunately, they strike a note of discouragement at the same time by failing to indicate
the realistic expectations she can have for reconditioning a pattern of inorgasmia with intercourse. I’m especially concerned for the woman who might ultimately have discovered this for herself had she not accepted the discouraging interpretations as fact." 
[ME: See, I'm almost with her on this. Yes, there is often a distortion between what women do and what the potential is (clits work - you just have to use them well), and yes lots of women don't orgasm with intercourse - and it's good to know you're not alone. However, then she starts talking about how women could basically figure out how to orgasm during intercourse. I mean yes it's possible for women to orgasm during intercourse (rub the clit against something while you're getting fucked), but why do women need to learn to orgasm during a situation that is by nature really hard to orgasm in??? Why can't we just not obsess about intercourse so much. M&J's sex therapy practice is so pathetically focused on making sure women in couples can orgasm while the dude is inside her instead of simply focusing on how each person orgasms and then helping them mold their sexual activity to each partner's needs. M&J can't seem to stop forcing women's orgasms into the societal box of intercourse even though, I swear, they know better.]

Playboy: "There are some women who experience something that they aren’t certain is an orgasm. How do you treat that situation in therapy?"

Johnson: "It’s possible that a woman is orgasmic and doesn’t know it, but I don’t think you can make this judgment for or against such an occurrence unless you have a good definitive history from her about what she thinks orgasm is. One way to further evaluate what she thinks it is is to find out how she came to think about it. Did she read about orgasm? Did somebody tell her? From where did she draw her conclusions? I usually move away from direct questioning at that point and suggest that we talk about her sexual feelings and how they began. We start with the early memory of genital feelings, physical feelings. Then we move in general terms to the circumstances under which they occurred, and then I try to establish her sense of intensity of feelings. Then I try to place these things in an update of her present relationship or present opportunities to respond to some kind of sexual stimulation. Then I want to find out in that whole course of history-taking the kinds of things that she considers stimulating and exciting, romanticized or technical or mechanical or whatever. I want to know where she’s at, what her own base lines are to the extent that she can be disarmed into discovering them for herself. Then with that matrix of knowing how she thinks of herself — sensually in other settings at other times —we go into the circumstance she’s describing: “I don’t know whether I’m orgasmic or not.” Finally, we can kind of measure one against the other.

Playboy: "You sound like you’re describing the ideal fantasy evening." 
[ME: Am I the only one that thinks this dude is giving a creeper vibe?]

Johnson: "In the past 20 years, we’ve observed several women who were able to reach orgasm through
fantasy alone — utilizing none of the other components." 
[ME: Yet they don't describe these fantasy-only orgasms in either Human Sexual Response (they specifically say they haven't observed this in this book) or Human Sexual Inadequacy. Why? Wouldn't that be a cool revelation to report?...Also, I don't really think the dude was asking her about fantasy orgasms. I think he was just saying that getting a woman's sexual history was a fantasy evening of his, right? or am I reading that wrong?]

Playboy: "OK, given these ingredients, how would you suggest that a couple deal personally with the
problem of the nonorgasmic female?"

Masters: "Seek professional help if trying together has reached an apparent stalemate. Your best friend or your partner may be your worst therapist. In the past few years, we’ve been getting a lot of
cases of sexual aversion. This is a reaction to sexual activity, or more often to the anticipation of sexual
activity of phobic proportion. It may manifest itself as an incredible level of anxiety, dread or revulsion — even as vomiting, diarrhea, palpitation or even momentary loss of consciousness.

Playboy: "What are the causes of such violent aversion?" 
[ME: probably a lifetime of terrible orgasmsless sex and a dude that's obsessed with making you like it or more specifically making you come using his dick which isn't ever going to work- or you know, something like that.]

Johnson: "Many things. With some frequency, we are encountering women who develop sexual aversion when their partner decides to teach them how to have an orgasm during intercourse. Mind you, I am talking of a woman who has had no background of sexual disinterest or dysfunction but who enters a relationship where she and her partner become interested in her orgasmic response. She has not been consistently orgasmic or with the desired frequency, and her partner feels that she could — or should — be doing better. They start working on this and sooner or later their efforts become just that— work. Not infrequently, the male partner considers her response to be the measure of his own sexual effectiveness. The removal of the pleasure aspect eventually leaves her simply afraid, to the point at which she has become nauseated or otherwise aversive at the mere thought of sex."


faking
Masters: "Sexual fakery is an escape hatch, a pattern of behavior that offers the illusion of
self-protection. The heterosexual woman who fakes an orgasm would be an instance of sexual fakery. Another example is the homosexual man who is impotent, and therefore always plays the role of the stimulator and insists that he has no interest in receiving pleasure. Usually, this sexual fakery is identified. In the long range, it is rarely anything but deleterious to the individual who practices it."

Playboy: "How does a homosexual woman practice sexual fakery?"

Masters: "In the same way the heterosexual woman does, pretending orgasm. We gave an example in the text of a woman who had engaged in homosexual behavior for ten or twelve years without achieving orgasmic release. Her partners began to complain that it took such a long time for her to respond, so finally she started faking an orgasm."

Playboy: "Does that make it more difficult for her to reach a genuine climax?"

Masters: "It can. A woman who pretends an orgasm generally tends to do so to remove herself as quickly as possible from the sexual interaction because she presumes there’s nothing in it for her. From then on, her chances of ultimately achieving orgasm are significantly diminished, for lack of opportunity and perhaps because she ceases to become involved sensually."

Playboy: "Have you read the foreword to Kurt Vbnnegut Jr.’s Mother Night, in which he warns:
'We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be'?"

Masters: "That’s a good understanding of the problem. People who are sexual fakers begin to identify
with the image they project. It makes it quite difficult to get to the root of the problem. Once they admit the fakery not only to the therapist but to their committed partner, if one exists, the therapist is well along the road toward helping them. But not until then."

Playboy: "Did any of your subjects try to fake an orgasm in the lab?"

Masters: "On occasion, but it was very easy to tell. The polygraph needle always gave them away." 
[ME: This is a super interesting question and response because one of the most egregious problems in female orgasm research is that most often the researchers don't verify the orgasms that the subjects claim to have had through detection of the involuntary pelvic muscle contractions that occur during orgasm. The truth is M&J are too secretive sometimes about their exact methodology, but they do make it clear that they identify orgasm in females by filming the vaginal opening muscles close up or sometimes using a specialty camera inside a clear dildo they call Cyclops to see the muscular contraction inside the vagina. Now scientists that do verify orgasms use new technology like anal probes that measure the muscular contractions. However, here Masters says there were those that tried to fake, but they could always tell by the 'polygraph needle.' Curious because that indicates in these cases they weren't checking for orgasm through what their previous research describes as the indicator of orgasm - the involuntary pelvic muscle contractions. Instead he said 'polygraph needle,' which could mean 1 of 2 things and neither of them seem valid as orgasm verifications to me. 1. Polygraph as in lie detector - as in they asked the person about it during a lie detector test. Lie detectors are notoriously incorrect, and you can't really be lying if you really believed you orgamsed...and I truly believe a lot of women that 'fake' during intercourse don't feel like fakers. They believe that what is going on is an orgasm even if it is just intense arousal or a mentally intense sensation. 2. Polygraph to Masters could simply mean detection of heartrate, breathing, blood pressure or skin conductivity, or all of the above. Those are things M&J also recorded in their research, and they are good indicators of physiological arousal, but not of orgasm. M&J in their research (and in no other research I'm aware of since) cannot identify through those measurements the difference between high arousal and orgasm. One needs to identify the muscle contractions to identify when high arousal moves into orgasm. I don't think Masters is a guy that is imprecise with his words, and I also know from M&J's own words that not all the tests were done for every sex act in the lab. Some were focused on skin changes, other blood pressure, others the muscular contractions or ejaculation. So this really makes me think that M&J may have done some experimentation that did not observe the pelvic muscle reactions to verify orgasm correctly, yet they took the women's word for whether they had an orgasm or not...probably if they felt like the breathing, BP, HR, etc. i.e. the 'polygraph needle' indicated they got to high arousal. That would mean they only called BS on the women that didn't get very aroused and claimed orgasm. That is a huge problem in my mind because females faking orgasm is a real thing that happens and there's no reason to think a women that gets highly aroused couldn't still fake (or really believe) an orgasm. That kind of scientific oversight can greatly skew results.]

trying not to seem too radical
Playboy: "Earlier, you mentioned that a critic had said that love was never mentioned in Human Sexual Response. Neither, perhaps more surprisingly, was oral sex. Why?"

Masters: "We didn’t study oral sex in the original research project because we didn’t have the courage.
We were running scared in terms of opportunity to finish the work. We had gambled our professional careers undertaking the investigation of human sexual physiology. Had we been stopped by the university authorities before we had something significant to talk about — where would we have gone from there?
[ME: I like to think this is the same reason they focus so strongly on the need for women to be able to orgasm during intercourse...because they don't want to be seen as too radical]

Playboy: "Reduced to a life of private practice?"

Masters: "At best; I might well have been thrown off the listing of a specialist society, even taken off the A.M.A. rolls or brought up for censure before the licensing board for moral misconduct. Those things could have happened."

8.07.2021

The Broken Circle Breakdown - An SSL Review

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The Broken Circle Breakdown
I've seen a bunch of movies lately where we see a lady come from nothing more than a dick moving around in her vagina; the ol' intercourse-only orgasm, aka vaginal orgasm. I mean, these albiet unrealistic depictions aren't uncommon scenes to find in a movie, but I feel like I've had a run on them recently. It started with What's Love Got to Do With It? It's a great movie despite the unrealistic lady-gasm depiction, and you can see that SSL Reviewed HERE. This second one is The Broken Circle Breakdown, a 2012 Belgium movie. There will be more to follow.  



Like I said in the What's Love Got to Do With It? review, which is about a 30 year old movie, these unrealistic lady-gasm scenes can't be blamed on age. Nothing much has changed. The Broken Circle Breakdown was made about 20 years later and has 2 equally unrealistic sex scenes. They will be described and discussed below.

The SSL Review (for those that don't know about them)
Only depiction or discussion of female orgasm and/or female masturbation and/or the clit are eligible for SSL Review. Nothing else counts, including plain 'ol sex if it doesn't include anything listed above. I specifically critique the realism (for instance, were the physical things happening to that women while she orgasmed things that could realistically cause orgasm for a woman?) and also speak on what the depiction/discussion reflects from and adds to the larger cultural discussion around lady-gasms and female sexuality.

You can see all the SSL movie Reviews HERE (and as always you can find all the SSL TV Reviews HERE).

 
Truck sex: orgasming with her feet behind her ears
The first SSL Reviewable scene is in the back of a truck. Didier and Elise are having sex - intercourse specifically. At first she is on top, sitting mostly perpendicular to him and by the sound of it, she's enjoying herself quite a bit. She's not completely bouncy, there's more of a grind to her movements, but her body isn't at an angle to his that would indicate her clitoral area would be making contact with anything but air. As far as hands, we can't see specifically, but there is no indication that either her or his hands are anywhere near her clitoral area. 

From this position they stop the action a bit and talk, and then she tells him to continue. And he does. He flips her over so she's on her back and he's on top of her. He pushes her legs up over his shoulders as he leans down toward her, having her feet almost over her head, and he's pumping into her. Again, there is no indication any hands are down near her clit area, and the angle and folding of her body would not likely allow any contact between his body and her clitoral area. All to say her vaginal canal is getting rammed a lot during this scene, but her clit area, the part a female needs stimulated to orgasm is not getting really anything from this sex. 

Yet in this scene, her verbalizations make it for sure clear what we are to assume happens. She comes with gusto on her back with her feet up around the her head. 

Cowgirl style sex and a cry
In a later scene, the two are on a bed. He is laying on his back and she is on top of him, facing him, straddling him, and perpendicular to his body. She is moving up and down, presumably, on his dick. These are definitely not bouncing up and down movements, but circular hip movements up and down - a bit grindy, but given her perpendicular angle to his body, not in a her-pelvis-grinding-against-his-pelvis way, but in a her vaginal canal moving down in a more circular fashion on his dick as opposed to moving straight down on his dick sort of way. So, like the scene before there was no indication that her clitoral area could have been stimulated and there was also no indication of hands down that way working on the clit area.

As before, she auditorily works up to it and then orgasms. Then she begins crying for reasons related to other parts of the story.

Clits need stimulation to orgasm as much as penises do
Let me just reiterate that. External clitoral area stimulation is as important to female orgasm as penile stimulation is to male orgasm. For real. If you imagine there is good scientific investigation out there that proves physically that women (or even some women) can orgasm from nothing more than a penis or dildo moving inside their vagina, then you are wrong. You're not alone in thinking that, and I couldn't blame you for imagining that is the case in this fucked up, misinforming sexual culture we live in, but it's just not true.  

So on that note, the two scenes above are really no different than a scene where a dude orgasms from rubbing his inner thigh in a very sexual manner. The only real difference is filmmakers don't see any problem making scenes like the two in this movie and viewers don't see anything weird about accepting those scenes as the way things are (or at least could be for at least some women).  On the other hand, a director would not sensibly assume they could create a scene with dude coming from leg touches unless it was comedy or absurdist in some way.

To sum up, we live in a world that basically doesn't get how females orgasm physically...but thinks we do, and basically does gets how males orgasm, physically. It's a problem because scenes like the two above reiterate the misconception that intercourse all by itself should be as orgasmic for women as it is for men. Scenes like these, and there are SOOOO many like this in all types of media, stick in our heads. They inform how we negotiate and play out our sexual experiences. They curve our expectations of female orgasm towards acts that are geared not towards female orgasm, but towards male orgasm, and worst of all, maybe, they make us confused, ashamed, or feel insufficient when the reality does not match our expectations. You know,  maybe even worse than that, they may influence us to fake or twist our experiences to match the expectations so that we are able to feel normal and appropriately sexy/sexual. 

It's messed up really, and no one seems to care or even notice much.

Vulva Rating
These 2 scenes and the scene in What's Love Got To Do With It? are all of the same basic kind. They show intercourse alone, with no stimulation focused on the clit area, as causing a female orgasm. They are all equally ridiculous and equally steeped in deep cultural ignorance and misconceptions about how females physically orgasm. I'm going to give this movie a slightly worse Vulva Rating though. 

It may not be completely rational, but it's because I feel like this movie was trying to be more progressive and failed, while What's Love Got To Do With It? was 20 years older and felt like it was simply trying to make a basic sex scene. It seemed to me in the Broken Circle Breakdown, Elise was meant to be a sexual woman that knew what she wanted and went for it. I think that's why she was often shown on top during sex and as grinding instead of bouncing her vagina over his dick. It aligns to 2 common misconceptions. The first is that banging with a circular motion is more lady-friendly, as if the penis stimulating the inside of the vagina in a circular motion is better than a straightforward motion (which I believe is a misunderstanding and twisting of the idea that grinding the clit against the partner while the penis is inside the vagina is more female friendly - which it is because that type of action acknowledges the need for consistent clitoral simulation in order for females to orgasm) . The second is that a woman simply being on top during intercourse is enough to get her an orgasm - as if her control of how the vaginal canal moves over the penis is somehow more orgasmic than his control of how the penis moves in the vagina. Granted, her control of the intercourse situation might be more fun and may be more pleasurable, but it doesn't change the fact that the focus is still on the penis and vaginal canal instead of where it should be when we're speaking of lady-gasms - on the external clitoral area. 

Anyway, that lady-on-top and the circular motion pumping advice that ignores the real, actual needs of lady-gasms is something that is common in progressive contemporary sex advice, and it annoys me, so that's why I'm lowering the Vulva Rating.

The Broken Circle Breakdown gets a 1 1/2 Vulva Rating.

(!)(!

7.25.2021

What's Love Got To Do With I? - An SSL Review


What's Love Got To Do With It?
If you've never see this biopic about Tina Turner, I do suggest it. I hadn't seen it since back in the early 90's around when it came out on video, and Charlie had never seen it, so we just checked it out a few weeks ago. It didn't lose much for me in the 30ish year gap between viewings. However, this time I noticed the lady-gasm part because that's what I do these days. 

So this Tina Turner biopic has a very small depiction of orgasm, and here we are - doing an SSL Review. It's not a top notch SSL review, but the movie itself is quite good. 




The SSL Review (for those that don't know about them)
Only depiction or discussion of female orgasm and/or female masturbation and/or the clit are eligible for SSL Review. Nothing else counts, including plain 'ol sex if it doesn't include anything listed above. I specifically critique the realism (for instance, were the physical things happening to that women while she orgasmed things that could realistically cause orgasm for a woman?) and also speak on what the depiction/discussion reflects from and adds to the larger cultural discussion around lady-gasms and female sexuality.

You can see all the SSL movie Reviews HERE (and as always you can find all the SSL TV Reviews HERE).

 
The Scene in Question: Her First Time
The scene is, unfortunately, a pretty common first time scene from a movie. Tina is quite young, and Ike is a grown man with a wife and a couple kids. They are in missionary position in a bed. She's nervous, but excited ('cause you know, he's a charming established man and she's naïve to the world and sex is fresh and all that). It's not rough. There's a bit of gentleness to it, but he is clear in his intentions and moves forward with decisiveness. 

The couple is covered mostly, so we only see the insinuation of insertion and gentle pumping of the hips. Tina seems largely motionless in her bottom half - as in she is getting pumped into and not working to control the pelvic movement or how their bodies are moving together. There is also not manual (by her or him) or oral stimulation to her genital area either before or during the intercourse. All that to say, the only stimulation that we can sensibly assume she is getting is the stimulation of a penis inside her vaginal canal.

We are not seeing her clitoral glans area getting any love; no hands, no mouths, no sense of grinding of the clit area against his pelvis (given the in-out movement by him and the seemingly lack of pelvic movement from her). Because for real - if a lady ain't taking some action during the intercourse movement to get her clit against him and consistently keep it there for grinding purposes, I dare say that her clit will be left in the cold. At the very best, if she isn't putting the effort in to keep her clit grinding against something during the intercourse, that poor clit might get the rare privilege of getting grazed from time to time but little to no hope of consistent friction or pressure. All that to say, Tina had no sensible stimulation to cause her orgasm in this scene.

And yet, she seemed to orgasm in this scene at the same time Ike did. Ike, of course, is getting the stimulation he needs to come. His organ of sexual pleasure, his dick, is fully encompassed by her vagina. So his orgasm makes sense, but her organ of sexual pleasure, her clitoris, is not, so her orgasm makes no real sense on even a basic anatomical level (Seriously - contrary to popular belief, the vaginal canal is not the organ of female sexual pleasure and stimulating it - i.e. intercourse alone- has never caused a recorded orgasm in all of scientific literature. Seriously.)

I won't say that the scene made a big show of her orgasm. It was subtle moaning that sort of came to a point at the same time he seemed to subtly climax and then subsequently stop the pumping into her. It honestly could be interpreted as simply moaning that followed his lead or a gentle faking, but nothing about that scene or the subsequent scenes made one feel she was dissatisfied with the sex. The overall feeling was that she enjoyed it and that her moaning came to a point during his orgasm which all together gives the feeling that this sex act was as orgasmic for her as it was him.

An Unrealistic, Sadly Normal Scene that Reinforces Ingnorance and Keeps the Sexual Culture Fucked Up for Female Orgasm 
And that, my friends is the problem with this scene and all the many scenes like it. Despite there was no indication in the scene that her clitoral area was getting any stimulation at all, the scene was set up in a way that an orgasm was indicated and we the viewers likely assume a female orgasm happened. It's actually really ridiculous. It's no different than a scene where a guy is getting his balls tickled without the penis ever getting touched. Yet, he seems to orgasm and not only that, but both the characters in the movie and the viewers take it at face value, as if it is completely expected and normal that he came. As if his ball-tickle orgasm wasn't ridiculously unrealistic or some weird fluke played for comedy. 

Point is, our culture understands how males orgasm - basically - and we expect some realism in the depictions (or assume ridiculous depictions are comedic). We as a culture do not have a realistic understanding of how females orgasm and so we blindly accept (and creators blindly create) scenes like this that subtly reinforce the unrealistic assumption that women should be as orgasmic during pure intercourse as males should. 

It might seem like a small thing, but these types of scenes permeate our media and our minds; adversely affecting male and female expectations of sex and pushing the cultural norms of sex towards acts that are orgasmic for males but simply are not for females...but with the added fuckery of people not consciously realizing how very not orgasmic intercourse alone actually is for females. 

It's kind of a mess, and you might think that this 30 year old scene is a sign of old-school depictions of sex, but it's not. at all. It's as common and accepted now as it was then. Those cultural norms and expectations haven't changed much, but I believe changing media to be more realistic could help. And that's why I keep SSL Reviewing this shit.

Vulva Rating
Granted, this is not an unusual scene, but it is a deeply unrealistic one when it comes to the female orgasm. To be fair, I don't think there was any ill intent or trickery from the creators on this. They, like the viewers were just incorrectly educated about lady-gasms, so a scene like this feels realistic even though it absolutely is not. That's a big problem though. So, I give this a 2 out of 5 vulva rating. It's low, but not so low. I'm being nice because there was no ill intention here. Only ignorance - and a wide-spread type of ignorance at that.
(!)(!)
 

7.05.2021

5 Movies #DirectedByWomen About Real People



Hello all! Per usual, I'm slacking off, and am going to post my house special 5-movie-list of films I've actually seen directed by women ...because it's quick and easy. I'm at my sister's house at the moment. There's 2 weddings 2 weeks apart with a lake vacation with family in between, so I've been working from another city. I had lots of niece and nephew graduations before that I was traveling for. We had 5 graduate this year. Also found out there are 2 more on the way. I've also got to hang with friends recently which has been excellent, might have drank a bit too much recently. One of my friends saw that I had no clothes worthy of wearing out in the summer and made me buy something  - which I actually appreciate. I need to be forced to buy new clothes sometimes. I'm also training for a new job while doing my old job, and that's probably been the biggest time suck, but I think I'm gonna like it. 

Anyway, that's my update about my life. I'm working on the summary/discussion of the Masters and Johnson 1979 Playboy interview, but it's not quite done yet. As always, it will be way too long when it is. So for now, please enjoy this list of 5 movies I've seen, directed by women and about real people. 

A Little History of These Lists
I started doing this categorized List of 5 movies thing where I showcase movies that were directed by women and that I have actually seen. It all started during the Directed By Women Worldwide Viewing Party in September 2015, and it was pretty fun, so I've continued doing it from time to time.

It's a bit off-topic from my normal fare, ya know, being that it's not specifically about lady-gasms or anything like that, but I think it fits the blog because
1. this blog is also about indie movie-making, and
2. this blog is partially about getting the female perspective of sexuality into our media. So, to me, supporting female voices in our media  means we're creating more room for female voices to speak on all types of things, which sometimes will be sex, orgasms, and sexuality.

You can find all my 5-movie lists HERE.

So, get ready for bio-pics and not quite bio-pics. I suggest popcorn while watching these movies, because I suggest popcorn at all times and in any circumstance.


The Movies

Can You Ever Forgive Me - This was directed by Marielle Heller (who also directed Diary of a Teenage Girl, which is one of my very faves). It has Melissa McCarthy, who I think is just straight tops as an actor. If you ask  me, she brings it - anytime and in any role. I saw this streaming a year or so after it came out. I thought it was great and would recommend to anyone.




2 Nico 1988 - This was directed by Susanna Nicchiarelli. I was drawn to this when I saw it on a streaming site because I like Nico's (probably most famous song) These Days. When I watched the move though, I was tired as shit, and I don't think it got the attention it deserved. It was cool though, and worth checking out. Maybe I'll hit it up again as well.



3 Mapplethorpe - This was directed by Ondi Timoner. ME and Charlie are always up for an artist biopic, and this happened to be one we saw some Saturday when we just kinda kept finding and watching them. It's a good one, and I hadn't known about his connection to Patty Smith, which was a cool surprise.



4 Misbehaviour - This was directed by Philippa Lowthorpe. I thought this movie was a great ride of feminism, beauty pageants, and schemes - a really well done popcorn movie with some depth and history and poignancy behind it. I don't know, but I wonder if it got screwed a little because of Covid. I think it could have done really well at the box office. This is a great choice for movie night.



5 The Art of Loving: Story of Michalina Wislocka  - This was directed by Maria Sadowska. I knew nothing about this woman, but caught this streaming somewhere. It's a great movie, and a great story. Again, highly recommend. Plus, SSL bonus - this movie is about ladies talking to ladies about sex - learning shit that the world doesn't want the ladies to know. So, respect.


6.16.2021

Masters And Johnson 1968 Playboy Interview



M&J 1968 Playboy Interview
In 1968, 2 years after their book Human Sexual Response was released, Dr. William H. Masters and Virginia E. Johnson were interviewed in Playboy Magazine on their groundbreaking research about how the body responds to arousal and orgasm contained in that book. I will be summarizing and commenting on that interview in this post.



Playboy Magazine, “Masters & Johnson Interview,” Hef's Philosophy: Playboy and Revolution from 1965-1975, accessed May 29, 2021, https://forthearticles.omeka.net/items/show/17. You can link to the full pdf of the article HERE.

The Interview Highlight (in my opinion)
The really interesting part of this article and the reason I really want to include a summary of it in my SSL collection is that Johnson reveals that, contrary to popular belief, no woman in their research was able to orgasm from use of the artificial phallus alone. All the test subjects needed some form of additional self stimulation to orgasm. This artificial phallus (that they called cyclops) was basically a clear dildo on a machine that could pump in and out of the vagina at the varying speeds controlled by the test subject. It also had a specialty camera inside that could record (even accounting for the movement from pumping) so that the researchers could observe what was happening in the vagina during arousal and orgasm. Masters and Johnson (M&J) recorded things like vaginal lubrication seeping from the walls and the rhythmic pelvic muscle contractions that mark an orgasm - pretty cool actually. 

I didn't know Johnson had said this until recently when my trusted lady-gasm research partner-in-crime sent me the article with it highlighted. It's actually quite a huge revelation because frankly the details in Human Sexual Response about how exactly female orgasm during intercourse was recorded and what exactly was happening when those orgasms occured is unclear. In fact, I would say it's one of the mushiest aspects of the research. It is often assumed (and I assumed) from what they write that orgasms during intercourse that M&J reported were observed and recorded while nothing was happening to the woman except for a the dildo moving in and out of the vagina - AKA an orgasm from intercourse with no additional external clitoral area stimulation.  M&J are clear that there is not some different type of "vaginal orgasm" that happens during intercourse, and give an explanation of how the clitoral glans is involved in this process. In the book they tell us that even if the clit is not given additional simulation during intercourse, it is close by the action and still able to get physical stimulation. They write that when the penis moves in and out of the vagina, it pulls on the labia, which pulls on the clitoral hood, which moves over the clitoral glans and thus simulates it. With that very indirect method of getting stimulation to the clitoris, you might not be surprised that M&J also found the orgasms from intercourse to be the weakest they researched, with manual manipulation by a capable partner being stronger and strongest of all, masturbation. 

Johnson's reveal tells me/makes me wonder a few things
1. If not during the use of the artificial phallus where they could have clearly visually recorded the rhythmic contractions that physically are known to indicate orgasm, how then, did M&J record orgasms during intercourse? It would be easy to record female orgasms during partner manual manipulation and masturbation because you can just put a camera looking right at the muscles around the vagina that contract during orgasm - and M&J certainly did this. However, during intercourse the view is bad. My assumption would be that maybe they used electrodes on the pelvic muscles to look for muscle contractions, but they don't specifically discuss how they dealt with what must be a tricky situation of keeping electrodes in place and measuring the correct things during the often quite violently physical act of intercourse. That they didn't discuss those details make me wonder.
 
2. It is interesting to note that although M&J only allowed participants who had a history of being orgasmic during masturbation and during intercourse (the history, I assume, being simply that the participants claimed they had this history), that even these seemingly orgasmically experienced women could still not orgasm from merely a phallus moving in and out of the vagina (and at a speed they chose and in a position where they were allowed to move their body freely). Yet, they were able to come when they added other additional stimulation to this dildo machine's movements. It tells me that if there are women out there that can come from merely the simulation of the penis in the vagina (with no additional external simulation), then it must not be very common or easy.  

3. It also tells me that the, let's face it, somewhat outlandish Rube-Goldberg situation they described with the labia pulling the clitoral hood and then moving against the clit, well, that didn't happen during the artificial phallus experiments - at least not enough to actually cause orgasm. The artificial phallus experiments would be the ideal time to really get that Rube-Goldberg orgasm mechanism recorded, but they didn't do it...and that makes me wonder if that really did happen even in the partner intercourse parts of the study. Did they observe that mechanism during the partner intercourse, or did they just hypothesize? It would have been harder to observe with a partner certainly (blocked view, ya know). So this means women in this study who came during intercourse did so with a human partner, and in that case there are a number of ways (besides the Rube-Goldberg-no-direct-external-clit-stimulation-situation) a woman could get direct clitoral stimulation during intercourse; grinding the clit against her partner or the bed for instance, or even her or her partner touching the clit - and M&J never specifically rule out that either of those things were happening during the intercourse orgasms...in fact M&J seem to always describe the orgasms as orgasms during intercourse - which is not the same thing as orgasms from intercourse.

4. So all that brings me to a very important revelation of my own. M&J, maybe didn't actually observe women orgasming from nothing more than something moving in and out of their vagina. I had previously assumed they did observe this during the artificial phallus experiments, and that they identified the Rube-Goldberg process as having caused it. 'It' being the orgasms during intercourse, aka the lowest intensity orgasms they researched, but an orgasm none the less. When I (hopefully soon) reread and summarize Human Sexual Response, section by section, I'll very carefully comb through their confusing language and statement about female orgasms during intercourse and see if I can get a clue of exactly what they did to observe and record these types of orgasms...'cause I'm much more skeptical now.  

The Interview Summary
So that's was my big upfront news on this, but also there are a lot of other cool tidbits in the interview as well. Below I will highlight any interesting and/or SSL-relevant items, and may comment a bit (always clearly denoted that they are my thoughts - not the article's - by putting it within brackets [ME:]). Do enjoy.

Writing Style and Early Criticism
  • Used Little, Brown & Company as publisher because its reputation was beyond reproach. M&J also specifically used dry, medical, Latin, complicated language to make it not titillating in the least...and it is not. No one can say this book was made to get you horny.
  • Masters, about the choice to write the book with such scholarly emotionlessness, "...in sexual matters, regardless of one's discipline or lack of it, one evaluates the material first emotionally and then intellectually - if the second evaluation ever has an opportunity to develop."  p68
  • Dr. Leslie H. Farber, a psychoanalyst was one of the early criticizers when the book came out.  He was appalled that Masters and Johnson had mechanized and dehumanized sexuality, and was sad about the lack of morality and modesty in this discussion of sex. He also was skeptical about the ladies. This Playboy article quotes Dr. Farber, "'My guess, which is not subject to laboratory proof,' wrote Farber, 'is that the female orgasm was always an occasional, though not essential, part of women's whole sexual experience.'" p67
  • Masters on the criticism about mechanization and dehumanization, "Rather than present an opinion-or psychologic interpretation - we felt it was long past time in this field to find out a few basic facts. That's what we tried to do." p74
  • M&J say 8% of their mail is negative of the work, with about 1/2 vicious, nasty, and unsigned and 1/2 from fine well-written people who simply think sex shouldn't be studied. Masters is clear that they respect these opinions. 22% are supportive, and the remaining 70% are the important ones - people asking questions about their problems of sexual inadequacy.
  • Masters: "We absolutely refuse to defend ourselves except in open discussion. If, for instance, a critical review of our work appears, whether it's totally valid or a total farce, we never write a rebuttal. We think there is only one defense, and that is continued research productivity. In anything as emotionally charged as this area, inevitably there is going to be criticism - some of real value, some useless. But if we were to spend all our time answering the critics, we wouldn't get any work done. " p70
The Research and Participants
  • M&J were able to maintain a press blackout during most of the years of their research so they wouldn't get shut down, but it got leaked 18 months before publication. They wanted another year to do more research on the cardiorespiratory. Masters says the book is quite weak in that area. 
  • Johnson about the artificial phallus that is now destroyed, "This may be an appropriate time to put to rest a popular misconception created by the mass media - that is the titillating assumption that the only purpose of the artificial phallus was to stimulate sexual response. This was not the case. During artificial coition, the research subjects never could achieve orgasm by use of the phallus alone - they all had to employ additional self-stimulation derived from their own personal preferences and previously established patterns.  The point is, a female responds sexually to that which is endowed for her with sexual meaning. Over a period of time, all the women in our sample probably could have oriented themselves to respond to the exclusive use of a phallic device if they had been so motivated; but to them, the laboratory phallus was nothing in or of itself, and neither the situation nor their own personal interest required that they make it so. Consequently, the only reason for creating and using the device was to provide an opportunity for definition and measurement of the intravaginal environment."
    • [ME: So, this is the quote I discussed above. In addition to all I said up there, I also think her total speculation that the participants would eventually have been able to 'respond' to just the dildo alone was a bit out there, and certainly not within the just-the-facts manner of speaking that they often pride themselves on.]
  • M&J used prostitutes but just to begin the research; no data from them is used in book
  • About 40% of people who wished to join were eliminated 
  • Playboy asked, "Because of the selective nature of your study population, some of your conclusions cannot be applied to the population in general. Is that true?"
    • Masters - "As it pertains to physiology, this criticism doesn't hold up, because the identical reactions were observed under all laboratory condition. Psychologically the criticism might be true, but we didn't make any psychological generalizations in Human Sexual Response. I might add, we were also selective in that we accepted only subjects who had a history of successful sexual response. If you are going to find out what happens, obviously, you must work with those to whom it happens."
  • When asked of the motivations of their subjects, M&J said especially for the younger ones, money had something to do with it, although it was only about enough for babysitting and transportation. They insisted on payment for their subjects so they could meet and keep schedules. They also knew from interviews that for most people there was real concern for the state of affairs in our sexual culture and that they believed too little was known and this researchm could help. Everything from rape of a neighbor's child to worry about their children's marriage, to illegitimate pregnancies in the neighborhood were reasons people gave for wanting more known and thus for volunteering for the research.
  • When Playboy asked if some participants maybe just wanted a socially acceptable way to get off, Johnson said, "In some cases, yes. There were young women-divorcees with children and so on-who had grave concern for their social image. They may not have had a relationship going at the time, and so the experiments served as a legitimate release for them." 
  • Johnson answered a questions about whether they were criticized about using unmarried people in the laboratory. She said only by the people who criticize it outside the laboratory. Masters adds on that unmarried subject that worked together were only ones that had done so outside the lab as well, and that some people approve of sex outside marriage and some don't. They had not thought of using unmarried people actually until a group of psychiatrists suggested it - who thought maybe physical response patterns might be different in and out of marriage. They are not. 
  • On the subject of privacy and of in-lab vs. private sexual response, Masters says, "The subjects were taken through several steps of orientation before being placed in research situation. It was a gradual process and included explanations of our motives or doing the work, of our techniques and of the laboratory environment. The individual was allowed to adapt at his own speed; some people indicated readiness faster than others. You see, it is our premise that the subjects bring their own patterns of response with them, and all we seek to do is to help preserve those patterns in a changed environment.  The reassurance comes from knowing the investigators are busy doing their particular work. There was never a situation where everyone was lined up looking." p76. Johnson noted that even though people were sprawled out and naked during the experiment, many of the more shy subjects still unconsciously or symbolically observed the rituals of modesty and privacy, like reaching for robes as soon as they were done, etc. The investigators also did so. For instance after done doing their work, they would intentionally turn away to give privacy even though they had already seen everything.  
  • When asked about whether they were concerned there might be different sexual patterns for people that are comfortable performing under observation, Masters says, "If there were major variations between performing under observation and performing in private, then we would have observed them when we recorded the person in the laboratory four or five years after their first recording." p76. He also noted that research can only be done on those being observed. You could do something like put an electrode in the uterus to test them at home, but the complaint of artificiality would still be there because the person knew they were being recorded. "We were faced with the fact that we had to move in the direction of laboratory recording or not move at all. I will say that, after thousands of recordings, we're convinced that we can translate physiological findings that we have acquired in the laboratory to the privacy of the bedroom. But I want to stress that this is just an opinion; perhaps we can never know for sure." p76
The Data and Findings
  • Playboy describes Master and Johnson's sexual response cycle, the final step being the resolution period after the orgasm which fairly quickly gets the the muscle tension and pelvic blood congestion back to pre-arousal levels. Then Playboy asks, "What happens to those individuals, particularly females, who don't go through the whole cycle to orgasm?"
    • Masters: "There are periods of irritability, emotional instability, restlessness, pelvic discomfort, lack of sleep. Combination of these symptoms may develop in the human female. You see, orgasm is a release point for the congestion of blood in the pelvis. This vasocongestion-which is the medical term for it-is relieved very rapidly if there is an orgasm. If not, the release of vagocongestion is slowed, particularly if the woman has had babies and has enlarged blood vessels in the pelvis. Her period of frustration, irritation and pelvic discomfort may last for hours sometime - though rarely - a day or two." p.78. Playboy then asks about blue balls, and Masters says yes, high arousal without release can cause some tenderness, but a later ejaculation or nocturnal emission will relieve it.
  • Asked about female ejaculation:
    • Masters says, "We have heard from four women who claimed that, with orgasm, they have an overwhelming release of fluid. But we've never had the opportunity to evaluate these women in the laboratory.
    • Johnson adds, "There are large numbers of women who have physical manifestations that fit their belief that they ejaculate. The fact that many women urinate under the intensity of emotional experience may very well be a factor here. But we don't know."
    • [Me: M&J later (in the 8-0's, I believe) acknowledge that female ejaculation can happen]
  • M&J were asked about penis size relating to a woman's sexual response and say they found this not to be true. They did mention their research is physiological, and it may be true that a person could have a psychological response to dick size..so maybe size might be mentally arousing, which would help get closer to an eventual orgasm.  
  • Of uncircumcised vs. circumcised penises, Masters says, "The uncircumcised male-and, in some versions of the folklore, the circumcised male- is presumed to have a greater tendency towards pre-mature ejaculation, because he can be more easily stimulated. We have no evidence that either presumption is true. Fundamentally, we cannot find any difference in reaction time, or sensate focus, between the circumcised and the uncircumcised male."
  • Asked about Freud's vaginal vs. clitoral theory pg 78-80
    • Masters: "It was Freud's concept that if a woman's response was restricted to the masturbatory or clitoral orgasm, then it reflected psychic immaturity. She could be considered a fully responsive, hence mature, woman only if she had orgasms during intercourse-by definition, the vaginal orgasm. In order to delineate between these two types of orgasm, Freud presumed they were entirely separate physiological entities. Our research indicates this is not the case. Certain clitoral changes occur with stimulation of either the clitoral area or the vaginal area, or from manipulation of the breasts or, for that matter, from simple fantasy. These changes are anatomically and physiologically identical, regardless of the source of stimulation. Secondarily, it is physically impossible not to stimulate the clitoris during intercourse. And I'm not talking referring to direct penile-clitoral contact."
    • Playboy asks if Freud presumed a mature woman transferring sensation from the clit to the vagina, and Masters says, "Yes, but there is no longer any need to speculate about this, because, as I started to say, the clitoris is stimulated during intercourse every time the female responds to a male thrust. This reaction occurs regardless of what position she may be in. You see, with each thrust, the minor labia are pulled down toward the rectum and, in the process, stimulate the shaft of the clitoris. So there is no physiological difference among clitoral orgasm, vaginal orgasm, breast orgasm or, for that matter, orgasm through fantasy. Incidentally, since the publication of the text, we've had the opportunity to evaluate three women who can fantasy to orgasm."
    • [Me: A couple things. 1. Masters defines vaginal orgasm there, as he always does, as an orgasm that happens during intercourse - which is specifically different from the more common way of speaking about it contemporarily, which is that it is an orgasm that happens from the act of vaginal intercourse alone with no additional external clitoral stimulation. 2. 'During intercourse' allows so many more possibilities for external clitoral stimulation - including that Rube-Goldberg dick ponding pulls on labia-pulls on clit hood - stimulates clit theory that M&J made popular - and that I assumed, up until Johnsons comment I discussed above, was observed to some degree.]
Female Sexuality and Orgasm
  • Playboy: "Manual stimulation of the clitoris by the male-as a form of foreplay-is strongly recommended in most marriage manuals. Does your research confirm the wisdom of this advice?"
    • Masters: "Not entirely. Many marriage manuals err in suggesting that the glans of the clitoris be manipulated; this is an extremely tender area, which the female rarely manipulates herself. She more or less stimulates herself along the shaft or just in the general clitoral area, which is called the mons."
    • Playboy: What about "riding high" - another favored marriage manual concept-in which the male maneuvers his body so the shaft of the penis comes into direct contact with the clitoris?"
    • Masters: "This is a misconception. Our findings show that the clitoris elevates and withdrawals from its overhang position during intercourse, making it extremely difficult to attain direct penile shaft-clitoral contact. It can be done, but it's an acrobatic maneuver in most cases and not really worth the effort."
  • M&J are asked about female orgasm and conception. They say they don't have sure knowledge. Some research, but nothing that can be scientifically supported.
  • Asked if their research has caused a preoccupation with female orgasm, Masters says: "We don't think you can over emphasize the importance of this subject." p.80 
    • Johnson: "Orgasmic preoccupation could occur only in a society in which sexuality has been so negated that many women have been unable to move confidently through all this discussion with a foundation of self-knowledge. A woman who has or has had a satisfactory relationship-and is secure in its effectiveness-can skim through the magazine article stressing orgasm or listen to the neighbor lady at the coffee Klatch brag, 'Oh, we have intercourse eight times a week and I'm orgasming one hundred percent of the time,' and still not feel threatened by this kind of discussion. But someone who lacks personal knowledge can be thrown into pure panic."
  • Playboy: "In your book you also discussed female multiple orgasm. You wrote, 'Women have the response potential of returning to another orgasmic experience from any point in the resolution phase if they submit to the reapplication of effective stimulation.' Since multiple orgasms were discussed by Kinsey and earlier by L.T. Terman, what particular significance did you attach to it?"
    • Masters: "Apart from several physiologic observations of a technical nature, one of the important things we established-to our own satisfaction at least-is that the female is naturally multiorgasmic. This had not been established before."
    • Johnson: "In spite of Terman and Kinsey, scientifically oriented people still imply that this is a freakish thing."
    • Playboy: "Picking up on the phrase "naturally multiorgasmic," do you believe that, all other things being equal, the female should achieve orgasm as easily as the male?"
    • Masters: "Yes, indeed. We have nothing to suggest otherwise. It would seem that the puritan and Victorian social restraints have destroyed or altered significantly the female's natural responsivity." 
  • Playboy: "Another aspect of female sexuality discussed in your text is the notion that the female's response is more diffuse than the male's - that is, that women respond sexually with more of their bodies than do men, whose pleasure seems to be centered in the penis. Would you comment on this?"
    • Johnson: "This, too, is probably culturally conditioned. We find that those men who value total expression undergo all the thrill and sensate experience of a total body phenomenon commonly attributed only to the female."
    • Masters: "I think what should be stressed here is that physiologically, the male and the female are incredibly alike in sexual response-not different. This is really what we tried to emphasize in the text."
    • Johnson: "If I may be permitted to comment on the larger issue implicit in your question-the fact that so many people of both sexes feel sexual pleasure only in the sex organs themselves-this is a manifestation of their rejection of their total sexuality. For example, a lot of women do not respond to breast stimulation because of its implied impropriety. A young person exposed to this type of negation will frequently reject the concept of breast stimulation and/or response. An anesthesia comparable with self-hypnosis is induced. I mention the breasts particularly because this type of negation comes out so dramatically when women reject nursing."
    • Masters: "Yes, and this negation may extend even to the genitals-as with the unresponsive woman who claims she never feels a thing during intercourse, no stimulations whatsoever. She has a certain amount of vaginal anesthesia that we're convince-as are many others-is psychogenically induced and relates to attitude, circumstance and environment. I do want to stress however, that we lack definitive data concerning the psychological deterrents to sexual response and sexual tension." p.80
  • Asked if women experience anything like nocturnal emission, they say they've done no dream research, but their certain it can happen, and Johnson points out there have been frequent reports of more erotic dreaming by abstaining women.
  • Playboy notes many women abstain from sex during menstruation and asks if women's sex-tensions are lower then. Masters says women can certainly be sexually responsive during menstruation, but few women report their greatest levels of sexual tension during menstruation. Johnston notes women might reject the idea of sex during menstruation, and that could put off sexual feelings. Also some women are physically uncomfortable during that time which would put sexual interest on the back-burner, but then again, if the circumstance is overwhelming in these cases (being reunited with a lover for instance) that would overcome everything else. Masters goes on to say there is no physiological constant related to this that is true for all women. Certain percentages of women report higher interest at certain times of the menstrual cycle, but, "Probably the greatest number of women report no consistently identifiable pattern of response." p 82
    • Johnson: "There are so many factors that make this difficult to pin down. For some women, sexual deprivation sends their needs and interest up. On the other hand, we find that frequency of orgasmic return helps maintain a high level of sexual stimulation - in other words, success breeds success."
  • Asking about Imagination, [Me: I think Johnson's points are important because it relates to my feelings about how women slowly lose the connection between orgasm/pleasure and sexual situations in a way men do not. As in the actual partnered sexual experiences women tend to have are less erotic and less orgasmic than the actual partnered sexual experiences that men tend to have...and our bodies' reactions when faced with future partnered sexual acts reflects that recalled knowledge of what we should expect.]
    • Johnson: "What some people call imagination could be described as recall. The only psychological constant in sexual response is the memory of, or the conditioned response to, the pleasure of sensation-in other words, to those things that have become sexually endowed for that person. These may be deliberately invoked during masturbation or during intercourse to help overcome a particular environment or occasion-a time or place that doesn't turn the individual on."
    • then, Johnson: "I do want to emphasize that imagination, as we understand it, relates not to fantasy but to reality, to a recall or use of the realities of a person's life. True fantasy-in other words, the invention of thought patterns related to sex or sexuality-is generally employed by those individuals who have had little or no previous successful experience." p. 80 
Other Miscellaneous and Philosophical Questions
  • Then playboy goes on a whole thing asking questions about imagination playing a big role in fucking an unattractive person, pressing about whether some things are more attractive than others like breast size for example (all focused on female not male attributes of course), and M&J deflect appropriately noting that although it's cliché to say, beauty really is in the eye of the beholder and things like Madison Avenue and Playboy are creating connotations related to things like breast size. Johnson points out that a woman's worry about her appearance might actually preoccupy her and cancel out her attention to real sexuality. She also said some women might take their symbolic sexual qualities and use them to conceive of herself as a more sexual person.
  • When asked if women find the naked male body attractive, Masters notes that Kinsey felt that women were not so aroused by the male body, but they didn't find that to be the case, and Johnston points out they've come through an era when the male body was very unsexualized - wearing shirts to the beach, etc. "Given equal opportunity, women will react to sexual anatomy just as men do-just as much or just as little, if society permits them to, and if they begin to perceive themselves as sexual beings." p80
  • Then playboy starts asking about porn and if it's taboo nature makes it particularly erotic and it should be legally restricted. M&J react with sensible statements about how we don't really know, and 'it's everyone's individual decision' kinds of things.
  • About birth control, M&J say their conclusions about effectiveness match previous studies. When asked if contraceptives affect sexual response, M&J speak on a few physical irritations that go along with some of them that might affect it, and then defer from speaking any further because they are currently researching contraceptives.
  • Masters, when asked about the medical profession's knowledge of sex said, "They know no more or no less about the subject than any other college graduates. They share most of the common misconceptions, taboos and fallacies of their nonmedical confreres."
  • Of pregnancy, M&J say barring pin or membrane ruptures, sex can happen throughout and that abstinence for about 6 weeks after is sensible because of the trauma to the vaginal canal. 
  • About aging, M&J basically say if there were satisfactory sexual experiences in the younger years, there's no reason they wouldn't continue into the older years.
  • They also get asked about sex ed and speak philosophically about setting examples for children throughout their life and what sex ed teachers should be like. What they say is pretty close to what any modern progressive would say. They also are asked about the sexual revolution and say it's not a revolution. It's a renaissance; speaking about pre-industrial eras where farmer's wives took them lunch in the field and had a roll in the hay - something that changed when men went away to the city.
  • Masters: "It must also be realized that the one physiological activity, after eating and sleeping, that occupies that greatest part of human life is no less worthy of definitive and objective research. We intend to devote the greatest part of our lives to that research." p202